The site of 'Amarna' (commonly known as 'el-Amarna' or incorrectly as 'Tel el-Amarna'; see below) (
Arabic: العمارنة ''al-‘amārnä'') is located on the east bank of the
Nile River in the modern Egyptian province of
Minya, some 58 km (38 miles) south of the city of
al-Minya, 312 km (194 miles) south of the Egyptian capital
Cairo and 402 km (250 miles) north of
Luxor. The site of Amarna includes several modern villages, chief of which are
el-Till in the north and
el-Hagg Qandil in the south.
The area contains an extensive
Egyptian
archaeological site that represents the remains of the capital city newly–established and built by the
Pharaoh Akhenaten of the late
Eighteenth Dynasty (c.
1353 BC). The name for the city employed by the
ancient Egyptians is written as 'Akhetaten' (or 'Akhetaton' – transliterations vary) in
English transliteration. It translates literally as "the Horizon of the
Aten".
The area was also occupied during later
Roman and early
Christian times, excavations to the south of the city have found several structures from this period.
[1]
Naming issues
The frequent designation "Tel el-Amarna" for the city is inaccurate: nowhere do the ancient remains constitute a mound of eroded architecture that would warrant the description of a "
Tel" (Arabic: "city mound"), so common elsewhere in the region.
Cyril Aldred notes that the name "Tel el-Amarna" is a misunderstanding of the name for one of the modern villages near the ruins, Et Til el Amarna. The name "Amarna" itself comes from the name of a tribe of nomads, the Beni Amran, who left the
Eastern Desert in the 18th century to settle on the banks of the
Nile along this stretch.
The city of Akhetaten
The area of the city was effectively a virgin–site, and it was here that the Akhetaten described as the Aten's
"''..the seat of the First Occasion, which he had made for himself that he might rest in it.''"
It may be that the Royal Wadi's resemblance to the hieroglyph for ''horizon'' showed that this was the place to found the city.
The city was built as the new capital of the Pharaoh Akhenaten, dedicated to his new religion of worship to the Aten. Construction started in year 4 of his reign (
1364 BC or
1346 BC) and was probably completed by year 9 (
1359 BC or
1341 BC), although it became the capital city two years earlier.
It is the only ancient
Egyptian
city for which we have great details of its internal plan, in large part because the city was abandoned after the death of Akhenaten. The city seems to have remained active for a decade or so after his death, and a shrine to
Horemheb indicates that it was at least partially occupied at the beginning of his reign,
[2] if only as a source for building material elsewhere. Once it was abandoned it remained uninhabited until Roman settlement
1 began along the edge of the Nile. However, due to the unique circumstances of its creation and abandonment, it is questionable how representative of ancient Egyptian cities it actually is.
The city as a whole is divided into a number of wide-flung components, which include:
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Royal Wadi and Tombs
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Tomb of Akhenaten
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Tombs of the Nobles
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Workmen's villages
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Boundary Stelae of Akhenaten
Famous landmarks within the city itself include:
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North City
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Northern Palace
★ Central City
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Great Temple of the Aten
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Great Royal Palace
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Bureau of Correspondence of Pharaoh[3]
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Small Aten Temple
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Kom el-Nana
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Maru-Aten
Amarna art-style
Main articles: Amarna art
The Amarna art-style is unique among the Egyptian world for its more realistic depiction of its subjects, instead of the strict idealistic
formalism universal in
Egyptian art up until that point, as well as for depicting many informal scenes such as the royal family playing with their children. Although the worship of
Aten (often referred to as the
Amarna heresy) was completely suppressed, the artistic legacy had a more lasting impact. The art broke with a number of important long-established Egyptian conventions. These included intimate portrayals of affection within the royal family, and the abandonment of portraying women as lighter coloured than men. The art also has a realism that sometimes borders on caricature.
Rediscovery and excavation

One of the Amarna letters
In
1887 a local woman digging for ''
sebakh'' uncovered a cache of over 300
cuneiform tablets (now commonly known as the
Amarna Letters). These tablets recorded select
diplomatic correspondence of the Pharaoh and were predominantly written in
Akkadian, the ''
lingua franca'' commonly used during the
Late Bronze Age of the
Ancient Near East for such communication.
Archaeological excavation has been conducted at Amarna by a series of
British and
German excavation teams since
1891. These efforts were preceded in the mid-
19th century by the survey work of
Karl Richard Lepsius and his team of
epigraphers, who copied wall illustrations, transcribed inscriptions and took paper squeezes of reliefs. The 19th century records made by these teams are of immense importance since many of these remains were later vandalized by the locals in anger against the
Egyptian Antiquities Service.
The current investigations have been in annual operation since the late
1970s, directed by Dr
Barry Kemp (Reader in Egyptology, University of Cambridge, England) under the auspices of the
Egypt Exploration Society (EES).
Chronology of investigation
'
1714' –
Claude Sicard, a
French Jesuit priest travelling through the Nile Valley, describes the first known boundary stela from Amarna.
'
1798–
1799' –
Napoleon's ''
corps de savants'' prepare the first
map of Amarna, subsequently published in ''
Description de l'Égypte'' between
1821 and
1830.
'
1824' – Sir
John Gardiner Wilkinson explores and maps the city remains.
'
1833' – The copyist
Robert Hay and his surveyor G. Laver visit the locality and uncover several of the Southern Tombs from sand drifts, recording the reliefs. (The copies made by Hay and Laver languish largely unpublished in the
British Library).
'
1843' and '
1845' – The
Prussian expedition led by Richard Lepsius records the visible monuments and topography of Amarna in two separate visits over a total of twelve days, employing drawings and paper squeezes. The results are ultimately published in ''
Denkmäler aus Ægypten und Æthiopien'' between
1849 to
1913. Despite being somewhat limited in accuracy, the engraved ''Denkmäler'' plates nonetheless form the basis for scholastic knowledge and interpretation of many of the scenes and inscriptions in the private tombs and some of the Boundary Stelae for the remainder of the 19th century.
'
1887' – A cache of nearly 400 clay tablets inscribed in cuneiform are discovered by an Amarna woman, which are now known as the
Amarna Letters.
'
1891–
1892' –
Alessandro Barsanti cleared the king's tomb.
'
1891–
1892' – Sir
Flinders Petrie works for one season at Amarna, working independently of the
Egypt Exploration Fund (EEF). Excavating primarily in the Central City, Petrie investigates the
Great Temple of the Aten, the Great Official Palace, the King's House, the Records Office (Bureau of Correspondence of Pharaoh) and several private houses. Although frequently amounting to little more than a
sondage, Petrie's excavations reveal additional cuneiform tablets, the remains of glass factories, and a great quantity of discarded
faience, glass and ceramic in sifting the palace rubbish heaps (including Mycenaean sherds). Publishing his results and reconstructions rapidly, Petrie is able to stimulate great interest in the site's potential.
'
1903–
1908' –
Norman de Garis Davies publishes drawn and photographic descriptions of private tombs and boundary stelae from Amarna.
'
1907–
1914' – Led by
Ludwig Borchardt, the
Deutsche Orientgesellschaft excavates the North and South suburbs of the city. The famous bust of
Nefertiti – now in Berlin's
Ägyptisches Museum – is discovered amongst other sculptural arteftacts in the workshop of the sculptor
Thutmose. The outbreak of the
First World War in August 1914 terminates the German excavations.
'
1921–
1936' – The Egypt Exploration Society (EES) returns to excavation at Amarna under the direction of T.E. Peet, Sir
Leonard Woolley,
Henri Frankfort and
John Pendlebury. The renewed investigations focus on religious and royal structures.
'
1960s' – The Egyptian Antiquities Organization (now the
Egyptian Supreme Council of Antiquities) undertakes a number of excavations at Amarna.
'
1977 – present' – The EES returns once more to excavation at Amarna, now under the direction of Barry Kemp.
2
'
1980' – A second, shorter expedition led by
Geoffrey Martin describes and copies the reliefs from the Royal Tomb, later publishing its findings together with objects thought to have come from the tomb.
References
1. Middle Egypt Survey Project 2006
2. Excavating Amarna
3.
★ Donald Redford
Akhenaten : The Heretic King, Princeton, 1984
External links
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Amarna, Capital of ancient Egypt Information page of the University of Cambridge excavations
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Model of the City Interactive map of Amarna.
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Amarna Art Gallery Shows just a few, but stunning, examples of the art of the Amarna period.
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Wallis Budge describes the discovery of the Amarna tablets
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Satellite image
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M.A. Mansoor Amarna Collection